Forty-eight prints, drawings and watercolors by two dozen British
artists follow the developments in the graphic arts during the
Victorian and Edwardian eras. Noticeably absent are the revolutionary
trends that wrenched French and German art toward modernism in this
same period. The British evolved, rather, from their home-grown
landscape traditions of Turner and Constable and from the crystalline
figurative style of the Pre-Raphaelites. The results were insular,
independent and united only by common devotion to excellence in
draftsmanship and the printer's craft. Led in the early period by
supremely talented American expatriates, James McNeill Whistler and
John Singer Sargent, England nurtured the idiosyncratic talents of
Frank Short, Muirhead Bone, Frank Brangwyn, David Young Cameron and
William Russell Flint whose contributions to English art were
recognized with eventual knighthoods.
Conant Galleries